Youth Mental Health

The mental health crisis in British schools

In 2023, 20.3% of children aged 8-16 in England had probable mental health disorders, rising from 12.5% in 2017. Schools face strain, with access to mental health services delayed. Government investment is urgently needed.



The mental health crisis in British schools
Unsplash/Annie Spratt

TL;DR |     Highlights from this story

● In 2023, 20.3% of children in England had probable mental disorders, up from 12.5% in 2017.

● Girls and LGBTQ+ youth, particularly Black LGBTQ+ individuals, face heightened risks of mental health issues.

● Schools struggle with inadequate mental health services, leaving children with unmet needs and delays in care.



N HS statistics suggest that 20.3% – one in five – children and young people aged from eight to 16 years in England had a probable mental disorder in 2023. This a huge rise from 2017, when 12.5% had a probable mental health disorder.

Data from social mobility charity The Sutton Trust shows that the prevalence of mental ill-health is higher for girls than boys. Girls are more likely to experience psychological distress and self-harm and are at greater likelihood of attempting suicide.

And research from charity Just Like Us highlights that young people who are LGBTQ+ are more likely to develop mental ill health. The risk is even greater for Black LGBTQ+ young people, 89% of whom have contemplated suicide.

According to a recently released report from The Lancet Psychiatry Commission on Youth Mental Health, there is substantial evidence across the world that youth mental health has substantially deteriorated. Key factors outlined by the report include social media, concerns about climate change, food, housing and employment insecurity and intergenerational poverty.

This decline in youth mental health puts severe strain on schools, which play a central role in identifying mental health issues in children, providing help and offering advice to families.


Under pressure

The 2023 annual report from education regulator Ofsted highlights some of the key challenges schools are facing.

Schools are using part-time timetables for children who are absent from school due to their mental health and are waiting for a clinical assessment. Many children are experiencing delays in accessing specialist mental health services. Children are not getting help in a timely way and the severity of needs that schools are dealing with is increasing.

Children with social, emotional and mental health needs form one of the most common categories of special educational needs and disabilities. Too many children are in educational environments which do not meet their needs.

The previous UK government attempted to support schools by funding education mental health practitioners in schools. These practitioners are employed by the NHS and work in schools to help children manage common mental health problems.

Dedicated support like this is hugely important. But, according to research body the Education Policy Institute, only a third of schools are currently benefitting from this service. And research suggests that the kind of support offered may not be right for some young people.

All children who need access to an education mental health practitioner deserve to benefit from this service. It is not acceptable for mental health support to become a postcode lottery.

What children need

The Labour government outlined plans in its manifesto before the general election to use some of the funds raised by removing the VAT exemption for private schools to ensure that every school has access to specialist mental health support.

This will require expanding the number of training providers which train these practitioners, as well as committing additional funding to support those who wish to train.

Urgent investment in the child and adolescent mental health service is also required to reduce waiting times. Schools cannot be expected to compensate for the shortage of mental health services. Teachers must be able to rely on the support from external professionals if they are to focus on their core responsibilities in the classroom.

The government’s curriculum and assessment review must consider how the school curriculum and assessment system can be better designed to support children’s mental health. Evidence shows that exams cause children to access counselling due to stress.

This review offers an opportunity to think differently and more creatively about how schools might conduct assessment. There are alternatives to the high-stakes examinations which cause so much anxiety.

In her letter to the education workforce in July, Bridget Phillipson, the education secretary, acknowledged the challenges that teachers were facing in relation to mental health and special educational needs services. She has pledged to focus on early years education and to rebuild the relationship between government and the education sector.

While this is welcome, the magnitude of the task at hand should not be underestimated. Schools cannot solve all the problems.


Broader problems

The government has announced it will introduce a children’s wellbeing bill. This is intended to ensure that children are safe, healthy, happy and treated fairly. However, it is vital that these initiatives lead to real tangible change for children and young people.

The Labour manifesto also promised to introduce open access mental health services in every community. This would certainly be a welcome step.

Investment in developing community mental health hubs to support young people’s mental health through non-appointment “drop-in” services is urgently required. Developing hubs to support families should also be a policy priority. Support hubs could help parents better manage their own mental health and to understand the importance of positive adult-child interactions.

Systemic issues such as climate change and poverty also need urgent attention because these are often the causes of poor mental health, as highlighted in the Lancet report on youth mental health.

PUBLIC SQUARE UK




Sources:

▪ This piece was originally published in The Conversation and re-published in PUBLIC SQUARE UK on 10 September 2024. | The author writes in a personal capacity.
Cover: Unsplash/Annie Spratt. (Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.)
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